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¡¡¡¡Once there lived a rich man with the name Baker£¬who was fond of chatting £¨ÁÄÌ죩£®¡¡1¡¡ he had his servant ¡¡2¡¡ all the housework£¬and therefore he had enough ¡¡3¡¡ to chat with people£®One summer afternoon£¬he was ¡¡4¡¡ to his friend's birthday party£®As soon as he got there£¬he began to chat£®He ¡¡5¡¡ chatting at table£®And all the other guests ¡¡6¡¡ but he didn't notice it£®His ¡¡7¡¡ was worried£®Because the man had ¡¡8¡¡ a call that his sister would come to see him£®He was going to ¡¡9¡¡ her at the railway station£®But Baker didn't want to say ¡¡10¡¡ to him and went on chatting£¬while eating the dishes£®

¡¡¡¡¡°¡¡11¡¡ you like a roast£¨¿¾£©bird£¬dear Baker£¿¡±asked the friend's wife£®

¡¡¡¡¡°Sure£¬¡± answered Baker£¬¡°But ¡¡12¡¡ is it£¿¡±

¡¡¡¡¡°¡¡13¡¡ the bird in the big tree outside£¬¡± said the woman£¬¡°I want it to be you ¡¡14¡¡ dish£®I'll cut the tree down£¬¡¡15¡¡ it and roast it for you£®¡±

¡¡¡¡¡°That would make a good dish£¡¡±said Baker£¬¡°But I'm afraid it'll ¡¡16¡¡ away before you begin to ¡¡17¡¡ the tree£®¡±

¡¡¡¡¡°Don't ¡¡18¡¡ it£¬dear Baker£¬¡±the woman said with a smile£¬¡°It is a ¡¡19¡¡ bird£®It doesn't know ¡¡20¡¡£®¡±

1£®

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6£®

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7£®

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C£®visit
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11£®

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12£®

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D£®what

13£®

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20£®

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In the 60s, people asked about your astrological (about star) sign. In the 90s, they want to know your website.   1   Your website is an electronic meeting place for your family, friends and potentially, millions of people around the world. Best of all, you may not have to spend a cent. The Web is filled with all kinds of free services and all it takes is some time and creativity.

  2  Like the table of contents of a book or magazine, the home page is the front door. Your site can have one or more pages, depending on how you design it.

While web pages vary greatly in their design and content, most use a traditional magazine layout£¨°æÃæÉè¼Æ£©.At the top of the page is a banner(ºá·ù). Next comes a greeting and a short description of the site. Pictures, text, and links to other websites follow.

  3  Think about whom the site is for and what you want to say. Next, gather up the material that you want to put on the site.

While there are no rules you have to follow, there are a few things to keep in mind:   4  If you are too much at the beginning, you may never get the site off the ground. You can always add to your site.

Less is better. Most people don¡¯t like to read a lot of text online.   5 

Smaller is better. Since it can take a long time to download large image files, keep the file sizes small.

Have the rights. Don¡¯t put any material on your site unless you are sure you can do it legally. Learn the Net¡¯s Copyright Article for more about this.

Now it¡¯s time to roll up your sleeves and start building

A£®Start simply.

B£®Break it into small pieces.

C£®Draw a rough layout on a sheet of paper.

D£®Many websites are considered very interesting.

E£®Before you start building your site, do some planning.

F£®Think of your home page as the starting point of your website.

G£®These days, having a web address is almost as important as a street address.


µÚ¶þ½Ú£ºÍêÐÎÌî¿Õ£¨¹²20СÌ⣬ÿСÌâ1.5·Ö£¬Âú·Ö30·Ö£©
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It was getting colder as my family ran out of the church, eager to get home. Across the street was a gas station where the bus  36  . It was closed for Christmas, but we noticed a family  37 outside the locked door, shaking in the rain. We talked about why they were there but soon I  38  all about them
When we got home£¬we received a call from my grandparents,  39  us to their house for the Christmas dinner. As we  40  through town, I noticed that the family was still there, standing outside the gas station
¡°Look at the children! That's just my 41 childhood. I must do something.¡± With these words£¬my father pulled off the road, and I saw the whole family: the parents and three children.
Rolling down his window£¬my father asked, ¡°Waiting for the   42  ?¡±
¡°Yes.¡± the father replied _ 43 , ¡°We're going to the nearby town where I have a brother and maybe a chance of  44 _. Out of work for two months now.¡±
¡°Well, that bus won't come for several hours, and you're getting _45 standing here.¡± my father 46  . ¡°Why not get in the car and I'll drive you there£®¡±
The man thought for a moment£¬and then he  47 . Once they got in£¬my father looked back _48  his shoulder and asked the children if Santa Claus had found them yet. The  49  faces gave him the answer
¡°Well£¬when I saw Santa Claus this morning,¡± my father said, winking (Õ£ÑÛ) at us, ¡°he asked me if he could leave your toys at  50 .We'll just go to get them  51   I take you to your destination.¡±
All at once, the children's   52  lit up£¬and they began talking and laughing
When we got to our house, they  53  straight to the toys in our Christmas tree. One of the girls took Jill's doll. The little boy grabbed Sharon's ball£®And the other girl picked up something of mine
It happened a long time ago, but I still remember the   54 on their faces. That was the Christmas when my sisters and I  55  the joy of making others happy
36£®A£®travelled     B£®stayed             C£®stopped        D£®left
37£®A . sitting        B£®standing           C£®holding        D£®keeping
38£®A£®cared        B£®argued          C£®worried       D£®forgot
39£®A£®inviting      B£®introducing       C£®telling        D£®forcing
40£®A£®flew               B£®drove              C£®raced         D£®walked
41£®A£®lucky              B£®surprising           C£®difficult           D£®frightening
42£®A£®bus          B£®time               C£®train          D£®help
43£®A£®warmly      B£®gently             C£®shyly         D£®angrily
44£®A£®a job        B£®a dinner            C£®a friend       D£®a present
45£®A£®comfortable   B£®sad                C£®wet           D£®warm
46£®A£®explained     B£®suggested           C£®ordered        D£®decided
47£®A£®added        B£®sighed             C£®nodded        D£®refused
48£®A£®on          B£®to                 C£®from          D£®over
49£®A£®excited       B£®disappointed     C£®worried        D£®interested
50£®A£®the station       B£®the bus               C£®my car         D£®my house
51£®A£®before        B£®if                 C£®once          D£®when
52£®A£®words       B£®faces               C£®lives           D£®feelings
53£®A£®turned       B£®jumped            C£®ran            D£®moved
54£®A£®anger              B£®surprise         C£®tears           D£®smiles
55£®A£®learned      B£®practiced        C£®recognized       D£®made


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My elder brother Steve, in the absence of my father who died when I was six, gave me important lessons in values that helped me grow into an adult. For instance, Steve taught me to face the results of my behavior. Once when I returned in tears from a Saturday baseball game, it was Steve who took the time to ask me what happened. When I explained that my baseball had soared through Mrs. Holt¡¯s basement window, breaking the glass with a crash, Steve encouraged me to confess(̹°×) to her. After all, I should have been playing in the park down Fifth Street and not in the path between buildings. Although my knees knocked as I explained to Mrs. Holt, I offered to pay for the window from my pocket money if she would return my ball. I also learned from Steve that personal property is a sacred thing. After I found a shiny silver pen in my fifth-grade classroom, I wanted to keep it, but Steve explained that it might be important to someone else. He reminded me of how much I¡¯d hate to lose to someone else the small dog my father carved from a piece of wood. I returned the pen to my teacher, Mrs. Davids, and still remembered the smell of her perfume as she patted me on my shoulder.
Yet of all the instructions Steve gave me, his respect for life is the most vivid in my mind. When I was twelve I killed an old brown bird in the yard with a BB gun. Excited with my accuracy, I screamed to Steve to come from thehouse to take a look. I shall never forget the way he stood for a long moment and stared at the bird on the ground. Then in a dead, quiet voice, he asked, ¡°Did it hurt you first, Mark?¡± I didn¡¯t know what to answer. He continued with his eyes firm, ¡°The only time you should even think of hurting a living thing is if it hurts you first. And then you think a long, long time. ¡° I really felt terrible then, but that moment stands out as the most important lesson my brother taught me.
56. What is the main idea of the passage?
A. The relationship between Mark and Steve
B. The important lesson Mark learned in school
C. Steve¡¯s important role in Mark¡¯s growing process.
D. Mark and Steve¡¯s respect for living things.
57. It can be inferred from the passage that when Mark confessed to Mrs. Holt, ____.
A. he felt surprised                B. he was light-hearted
C. he felt frightened               D. he behaved bravely
58. In the story about the pen, which of the following lessons did Steve teach his brother?      
A. Respect for personal property.
B. Respect for life.
C. Sympathy for people with problems.
D. The value of honesty.
59. Which of the follow is true according to the passage?
A. Mark was still a boy when he wrote this passage.
B. Even if a living thing hurts you, you should not kill it without hesitation
C. When a living thing hurts you, you should kill it.
D. Mark lost the small dog his father raised.

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In the 60s, people asked about your astrological (about star) sign. In the 90s, they want to know your website.   1   Your website is an electronic meeting place for your family, friends and potentially, millions of people around the world. Best of all, you may not have to spend a cent. The Web is filled with all kinds of free services and all it takes is some time and creativity.

  2  Like the table of contents of a book or magazine, the home page is the front door. Your site can have one or more pages, depending on how you design it.

While web pages vary greatly in their design and content, most use a traditional magazine layout£¨°æÃæÉè¼Æ£©.At the top of the page is a banner(ºá·ù). Next comes a greeting and a short description of the site. Pictures, text, and links to other websites follow.

  3  Think about whom the site is for and what you want to say. Next, gather up the material that you want to put on the site.

While there are no rules you have to follow, there are a few things to keep in mind:   4  If you are too much at the beginning, you may never get the site off the ground. You can always add to your site.

Less is better. Most people don¡¯t like to read a lot of text online.   5 

Smaller is better. Since it can take a long time to download large image files, keep the file sizes small.

Have the rights. Don¡¯t put any material on your site unless you are sure you can do it legally. Learn the Net¡¯s Copyright Article for more about this.

Now it¡¯s time to roll up your sleeves and start building

 

A£®Start simply.

B£®Break it into small pieces.

C£®Draw a rough layout on a sheet of paper.

D£®Many websites are considered very interesting.

E£®Before you start building your site, do some planning.

F£®Think of your home page as the starting point of your website.

G£®These days, having a web address is almost as important as a street address.

 

 

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It was getting colder as my family ran out of the church, eager to get home. Across the street was a gas station where the bus  36  . It was closed for Christmas, but we noticed a family  37 outside the locked door, shaking in the rain. We talked about why they were there but soon I  38  all about them

When we got home£¬we received a call from my grandparents,  39  us to their house for the Christmas dinner. As we  40  through town, I noticed that the family was still there, standing outside the gas station

¡°Look at the children! That's just my 41 childhood. I must do something.¡± With these words£¬my father pulled off the road, and I saw the whole family: the parents and three children.

Rolling down his window£¬my father asked, ¡°Waiting for the   42  ?¡±

¡°Yes.¡± the father replied _ 43 , ¡°We're going to the nearby town where I have a brother and maybe a chance of  44 _. Out of work for two months now.¡±

¡°Well, that bus won't come for several hours, and you're getting _45 standing here.¡± my father 46  . ¡°Why not get in the car and I'll drive you there£®¡±

The man thought for a moment£¬and then he  47 . Once they got in£¬my father looked back _48  his shoulder and asked the children if Santa Claus had found them yet. The  49  faces gave him the answer

¡°Well£¬when I saw Santa Claus this morning,¡± my father said, winking (Õ£ÑÛ) at us, ¡°he asked me if he could leave your toys at  50 .We'll just go to get them  51   I take you to your destination.¡±

All at once, the children's   52  lit up£¬and they began talking and laughing

When we got to our house, they  53  straight to the toys in our Christmas tree. One of the girls took Jill's doll. The little boy grabbed Sharon's ball£®And the other girl picked up something of mine

It happened a long time ago, but I still remember the   54 on their faces. That was the Christmas when my sisters and I  55  the joy of making others happy

36£®A£®travelled       B£®stayed               C£®stopped         D£®left

37£®A . sitting          B£®standing              C£®holding           D£®keeping

38£®A£®cared        B£®argued                 C£®worried          D£®forgot

39£®A£®inviting        B£®introducing     C£®telling         D£®forcing

40£®A£®flew         B£®drove                 C£®raced           D£®walked

41£®A£®lucky          B£®surpri sing             C£®difficult    D£®frightening

42£®A£®bus           B£®time                 C£®train             D£®help

43£®A£®warmly        B£®gently                C£®shyly             D£®angrily

44£®A£®a job          B£®a dinner               C£®a friend          D£®a present

45£®A£®comfortable    B£®sad                  C£®wet             D£®warm

46£®A£®explained       B£®suggested             C£®ordered           D£®decided

47£®A£®added         B£®sighed                C£®nodded           D£®refused

48£®A£®on            B£®to                   C£®from             D£®over

49£®A£®excited        B£®disappointed  C£®worried           D£®interested

50£®A£®the station                 B£®the bus                    C£®my car            D£®my house

51£®A£®before          B£®if                     C£®once             D£®when

52£®A£®words         B£®faces                 C£®lives     D£®feelings

53£®A£®turned       B£®jumped               C£®ran              D£®moved

54£®A£®anger                  B£®surprise      C£®tears             D£®smiles

55£®A£®learned        B£®practiced     C£®recognized         D£®made

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